Come to a mini-retreat day on Saturday, February 11th 2012
At The Great Hall
1382 Ontario St., in Burlington
9:30 - 10 A.M. - Coffee and Tea
10 - 11:30 - Part 1 of movie, "Into Great Silence"
11:30 - break and get ready for lunch
12 noon - eating together, some time for reflection, walking, journalling.
1 - 2:30 P.M. - Part 2 of "Into Great Silence."
2:30 - sharing the gift of the day.
3 p.m. - safe home.
Review of movie by Amazon:
Nestled deep in the postcard-perfect French Alps, the Grande Chartreuse is considered one of the world s most ascetic monasteries. In 1984, German filmmaker Philip Gröning wrote to the Carthusian order for permission to make a documentary about them. They said they would get back to him. Sixteen years later, they were ready. Gröning, sans crew or artificial lighting, lived in the monks quarters for six months filming their daily prayers, tasks, rituals and rare outdoor excursions. This transcendent, closely observed film seeks to embody a monastery, rather than simply depict one it has no score, no voiceover and no archival footage. What remains is stunningly elemental: time, space and light. One of the most mesmerizing and poetic chronicles of spirituality ever created, INTO GREAT SILENCE dissolves the border between screen and audience with a total immersion into the hush of monastic life. More meditation than documentary, it s a rare, transformative experience for all.
Please register (free) on the Green form to the right at top ------->
There is no charge for the day, though if any would like to donate, there will be a donation basket available with proceeds going 1/2 each to Contemplative Fire Niagara and to our local Centering Prayer Group.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Advent Longing
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Photo Credit: Xolob58 on Flickr.com |
I invite you let surface your Holy Longing for God.
Try to find some quiet time every day to sense your deepest need.
You, God, who live next door -
If at times, through the long night, I trouble you
with my urgent knocking -
this is why: I hear you breathe so seldom.
I know you’re all alone in that room.
If you should be thirsty, there’s no one
to get you a glass of water.
I wait listening, always. Just give me a sign!
I’m right here.
As it happens, the wall between us
is very thin. Why couldn’t a cry
from one of us
break it down? It would crumble
easily,
it would barely make a sound.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Please check out an Advent Contemplative Fire resource here.
with my urgent knocking -
this is why: I hear you breathe so seldom.
I know you’re all alone in that room.
If you should be thirsty, there’s no one
to get you a glass of water.
I wait listening, always. Just give me a sign!
I’m right here.
As it happens, the wall between us
is very thin. Why couldn’t a cry
from one of us
break it down? It would crumble
easily,
it would barely make a sound.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Please check out an Advent Contemplative Fire resource here.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Living the Mystery Retreat Day - The Labyrinth
Our next event is a "Living the Mystery" Retreat day about the Labyrinth.
We are pleased to have Canon Paddy Doran to lead us in an experience of the Labyrinth.
This retreat will run from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M.
Saturday, 17 September 2011
at St. George's Church, Lowville
map here.
Please bring your own packed lunch.
Coffee, Tea, Juice and water will be provided.
Cost is $25 for the day (if you need a bursary to assist you with this fee, just email Stuart here.)
There will be time to learn about the Labyrinth,
time to experience it
and space for stillness, refreshment, journalling and insight!
All people are welcome to join us for this event.
Please pre-register using the form to the right ---->
Don't forget to hit the "Register Now" button.
Book early as space is limited!
Please pay in cash on the day of the event.
We are pleased to have Canon Paddy Doran to lead us in an experience of the Labyrinth.
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Photo: Lars Hammar on Flickr.com |
Saturday, 17 September 2011
at St. George's Church, Lowville
map here.
Please bring your own packed lunch.
Coffee, Tea, Juice and water will be provided.
Cost is $25 for the day (if you need a bursary to assist you with this fee, just email Stuart here.)
There will be time to learn about the Labyrinth,
time to experience it
and space for stillness, refreshment, journalling and insight!
All people are welcome to join us for this event.
Please pre-register using the form to the right ---->
Don't forget to hit the "Register Now" button.
Book early as space is limited!
Please pay in cash on the day of the event.
Friday, June 3, 2011
Creation's Song - A Gathering
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Photo credit: andycoan on Flickr.com |
at the Great Hall - 1382 Ontario Street, Burlington, Ontario.
God saw everything that God had made, and indeed, it was very good.
Come and celebrate creation with us.
You will experience:
Wale Song
Stillness
A Creation Labyrinth
A sense of your own creation
A reminder that all of creation is grounded in the being of God.
Please bring your family and friends and let's celebrate together!
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Pilgrimage to Now/Here
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Photocredit: SPhilip1225 on Flickr.com |
Everyone bring their own snack. This will include a hike in silence in twos or threes. A time to snack and share your insights and a teaching on walking meditation. Bring along those who you think would enjoy this time. For more information, please speak with Stuart at 905-634-1826 or email me here.
Map of Lowville Park
Inscription for a Garden Gate
Pause, friend, and read before you enter here
This vine-clad wall encloses Holy Ground.
Herein a mellowed garden dreams
away the years.
Steeped in serene, sweet light
and muted sound.
Herein tranquility and peace abide.
For God walks here at cool of
evening-tide.
Pause, friend, and strip from out
your heart
All vanity, all bitterness, all hate:
Quench, for this hour, the fever
of your fears.
Then, treading softly, pass within
this gate.
There, where the ancient trees wait,
hushed and dim.
May you find God, and walk awhile with Him.
written by Pearl C. Hiatt
Friday, April 1, 2011
Contemplative Fire Recommends:
We would encourage the Contemplative Fire community to attend a Retreat Day organized by Christ's Church Cathedral Called:
Thin Places - Where the Divine Breaks Through
This will be an exploration of Celtic Spirituality at:
Canterbury Hills (in Ancaster, ON)
Saturday, 14 May 2011 from 10 am to 3 pm
Cost: $40 (includes Lunch)
Register by email to Rosemary by clicking here.
For as long as people have drawn breath, they have sought to encounter the divine in daily life. Sacred places, once established, have been built upon time and again, even by successive religions. Stonehenge, Iona and Lindisfarne remain places of pilgrimage to this day.
The Celts especially saw evidence of the Sacred in nature, and exemplified it in their art and in their music. Druid priests were seen as those who had a special knowledge of the Divine, and were experienced as conduits between the sacred and ordinary people.
Christianity was within itself a mystical tradition where the Divine breaks through into the ordinary in terns of laces, art, and sacred objects, music, writings, and people. We can express this as "thinness", where the veil hiding the divine from us is briefly blown aside and we encounter the Godhead.
At Canterbury Hills, itself a "thin place", we will spend a day and explore our spirituality, and our relationship with God. We will find that special place where we feel in communion with the Divine all around us. We will experience in music, that "thin" quality which transports us from the ordinary into the Divine. We will discover the special people in our own lives who seem to posses spiritual qualitites, and look at how Jesus exemplefied the ultimate "thinness" in his work and ministry.
Thin Places - Where the Divine Breaks Through
This will be an exploration of Celtic Spirituality at:
Canterbury Hills (in Ancaster, ON)
Saturday, 14 May 2011 from 10 am to 3 pm
Cost: $40 (includes Lunch)
Register by email to Rosemary by clicking here.
![]() |
Photo Credit: Alan Cleaver |
The Celts especially saw evidence of the Sacred in nature, and exemplified it in their art and in their music. Druid priests were seen as those who had a special knowledge of the Divine, and were experienced as conduits between the sacred and ordinary people.
![]() |
Photo Credit: A.G. Armstrong on Flickr.com |
At Canterbury Hills, itself a "thin place", we will spend a day and explore our spirituality, and our relationship with God. We will find that special place where we feel in communion with the Divine all around us. We will experience in music, that "thin" quality which transports us from the ordinary into the Divine. We will discover the special people in our own lives who seem to posses spiritual qualitites, and look at how Jesus exemplefied the ultimate "thinness" in his work and ministry.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Contemplative Fire Events
Contemplative Fire Hosted a Lenten Retreat called "Awakening"
We considered how the Season of Lent can be thought of as a time for us to awaken to the Spirit within. It is a season to let go of some things, to allow us to focus on more important things. Lent is an invitation to take some time apart.
We considered how awakening is like the "popping" of a poppy.
At first the poppy is tight, compact, full of potential, but perhaps constricted, restricted and cramped.
Our lives are often like that. And we yearn for the spaciousness of an awakened spirit.
An awakened spirit is open. It is unpredictable in its form and flow. It moves. It is a surprise.
A wonderful part of the day was the sharing. We shared wine and bread. We shared a wonderful meal. And we shared about ourselves: what speaks to us, what our experience has been.
A poem which we shared speaks about both the need to dive into the deep, and fear of it. And how, fear can be transcended and reality can be changed when Spirits awaken.
A Poem by Carol Bialock:
I built my house by the sea.
Not on sand, mind you.
Not on the shifting sand.
And I built it of rock.
A strong house.
By a strong sea.
And we got well-acquainted, the sea and I.
Good neighbors.
Not that we spoke much.
We met in silences.
Respectful, keeping our distance,
but looking our thoughts across the fence
of sand.
Always, the fence of sand our barrier;
always the sand between.
And then one day
(I still don't know how it happened),
but the sea came.
Without warning.
Without welcome, even.
Not sudden and swift, but sifting across the
sand like wine.
Less like the flow of water than the flow
of blood.
Slow, but coming.
Slow, but flowing like an open wound.
And I thought of flight and I thought of drowning and I thought of death.
And while I thought the sea crept higher,
till it reached my door.
I knew, then, there was neither flight nor
death nor drowning.
That when the sea comes calling you stop
being good neighbors,
Well-acquainted, friendly-from-a-distance
neighbors.
And you give your house for a coral castle,
And you learn to breathe under water.
Quoted from "Contemplative Catholic" here.
We concluded our day with some visioning for the future of Contemplative Fire Niagara. Our Core Team will be meeting in the near future to plan Contemplative Fire Niagara Events and will keep you updated.
![]() |
Photo Credit: Sandchem on Flickr.com |
We considered how awakening is like the "popping" of a poppy.
At first the poppy is tight, compact, full of potential, but perhaps constricted, restricted and cramped.
Our lives are often like that. And we yearn for the spaciousness of an awakened spirit.
![]() |
Photo Credit: Robynejayon Flickr.com |
A wonderful part of the day was the sharing. We shared wine and bread. We shared a wonderful meal. And we shared about ourselves: what speaks to us, what our experience has been.
A poem which we shared speaks about both the need to dive into the deep, and fear of it. And how, fear can be transcended and reality can be changed when Spirits awaken.
A Poem by Carol Bialock:
![]() |
Photo Credit: Rusty Russ on Flickr.com |
Not on sand, mind you.
Not on the shifting sand.
And I built it of rock.
A strong house.
By a strong sea.
And we got well-acquainted, the sea and I.
Good neighbors.
Not that we spoke much.
We met in silences.
Respectful, keeping our distance,
but looking our thoughts across the fence
of sand.
Always, the fence of sand our barrier;
always the sand between.
And then one day
(I still don't know how it happened),
but the sea came.
Without warning.
Without welcome, even.
Not sudden and swift, but sifting across the
sand like wine.
Less like the flow of water than the flow
of blood.
Slow, but coming.
Slow, but flowing like an open wound.
And I thought of flight and I thought of drowning and I thought of death.
And while I thought the sea crept higher,
till it reached my door.
I knew, then, there was neither flight nor
death nor drowning.
That when the sea comes calling you stop
being good neighbors,
Well-acquainted, friendly-from-a-distance
neighbors.
And you give your house for a coral castle,
And you learn to breathe under water.
Quoted from "Contemplative Catholic" here.
![]() |
Photo Credit - Robert Scott Photography on Flickr.com |
We concluded our day with some visioning for the future of Contemplative Fire Niagara. Our Core Team will be meeting in the near future to plan Contemplative Fire Niagara Events and will keep you updated.
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